10 Nov Study: Muslim women uncomfortable with U.S. doctors

USA Today | November 9 – U.S. doctors must become more attuned to Islamic beliefs and values that could affect the physician-patient relationship with Muslim Americans, researchers found in a recently released study. This will become even more important as the U.S. Muslim population of nearly 7 million continues to grow, they found.

In focus groups of Muslim Americans, “women would say, ‘I delay care because I can’t find a provider that’s of the same gender. They want me to put this gown on, but I’m uncomfortable,’ ” says the study’s lead author Aasim Padela, a Muslim emergency medicine doctor at the University of Michigan who is a visiting fellow at the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies in London.